Profile: Kevin Marsh's three years at the helm of Today have been steeped in controversy - from the Hutton affair and rows with John Humphrys to criticism that the programme has lost its edge. By Julia Day.

The Hutton inquiry found that the scientist caught in the storm over the 'sexed up' Iraq dossier committed suicide. Now, for the first time, the experienced ambulance crew who were among the first on the scene tell of their doubts about the decision. Special report by
Antony Barnett.

10.30am: A docu-drama about the life of David Kelly that could reignite the controversy surrounding the BBC's Iraq dossier row with the government is one of the highlights of Channel 4's winter 2005 programming season. By Jason Deans.

Democracy in Britain is in a moribund state, as shown by an 'inept' Lord Hutton and the decision by Lord Butler's committee to 'bottle out' of identifying who was responsible for intelligence failures over Iraq, according to former BBC chairman Gavyn Davies. By
Patrick Barkham.

In exclusive extracts from their book,
Francis Beckett and
David Hencke reveal how the short-lived wooing of the Daily Mail ended in disaster, the PM's anti-union agenda, and why Lord Hutton got the Kelly inquiry job.

Downing Street reacted with lofty disdain to Greg Dyke, the former BBC director general, yesterday after he launched a scathing attack on No 10 over the Iraq war and its treatment of the BBC. By Sarah Hall and Matt Wells.

Journalist Andrew Gilligan launched a blistering attack on the government, claiming that 'not only will New Labour never be able to get away with another war, it will never be able to get away with another war against the BBC'.

Just when the BBC is trying to put the Iraq dossier row behind it, the reporter at the centre of the affair, Andrew Gilligan, looks set to reopen old wounds with a keynote speech at the MediaGuardian Edinburgh International Television Festival. By Jason Deans.

Lord Hutton revealed last night he had not allowed cameras into his inquiry into the death of David Kelly while witnesses were being questioned because of the strain it would have imposed upon them. By
Clare Dyer.